Famiss, Women's Success Literature and HistoryFamiss, Women's Success Literature and HistoryWomen's biographies, quotes by women, women's health, women's art, and women's history. Articles
Got the Middle of the Week Work Blues? Rx -Ellen DeGeneres
2008-07-30 16:21:00 "Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for - in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it."So the question is - Why be normal? Enjoy the rest of the week.Looking for more? Please visit FaMiss - Women's Success History & Literature, including books & movie reviews highlighting historical and modern women experiences.Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com More About: Blues , Ellen Degeneres , Work , Middle , Week
Thelma & Louise: Instead of Freedom, They Chose Prison
2008-07-28 14:16:00 "You get what you settle for."Thelma and Louise 1991 movieI missed this movie when it first came out. Finally making the time for this "girlfriend" classic, I looked forward to wild adventures and renegade women. Instead I found women who managed to escape from one prison only to securely lock themselves in another.The movie unfolds into one shackle after another as each woman makes a choice to leave behind a world that either bores or pains them only to plunge into a lawless, lifeless abyss.I was so disappointed in the courageous attitude of these women who seemed to spend more time reacting to events than to planning and creating them. Still, I do love the quote "You get what you settle for." It helps keep me in check when I am grumbling about my place in life. - I have what I've settled for. So the question each of us should ask is are we happy with what we have?Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://f... More About: Freedom , Prison
Thelma & Louise: Instead of Freedom, They Chose Prison
2008-07-28 14:16:00 "You get what you settle for."Thelma and Louise 1991 movieI missed this movie when it first came out. Finally making the time for this "girlfriend" classic, I looked forward to wild adventures and renegade women. Instead I found women who managed to escape from one prison only to securely lock themselves in another.The movie unfolds into one shackle after another as each woman makes a choice to leave behind a world that either bores or pains them only to plunge into a lawless, lifeless abyss.I was so disappointed in the courageous attitude of these women who seemed to spend more time reacting to events than to planning and creating them. Still, I do love the quote "You get what you settle for." It helps keep me in check when I am grumbling about my place in life. - I have what I've settled for. So the question each of us should ask is are we happy with what we have?About the author: Allison Frederick is a writer and online marketing educator for other creative women. www.FaMissWome... More About: Freedom , Prison
Girlfriends Hit the Road: a 1920s Road Trip Book Review of Eight Women, Two
2008-07-27 16:36:00 Book Review of Eight Women , Two Model Ts, and the American West (2007) by Joanne WilkeAuthor Joanne Wilke is a wonderful storyteller whose childhood memories waffle into the readers? nostrils like homemade apple pie. She beautifully captures the story of her grandmother?s trip to California from Iowa in 1924.Eight young women loaded their belongings into two Model T cars and headed to California. Wilke tries to answer the question why did these girls do this? How did they find the courage and convince their parents to let them go? Even though Wilke worked from living testimonies of some of the women who made the journey, read their journals and letters back home, this adventure had many gaps and conflicting accounts. Wilke supplements the story with her own childhood memories of spending the summers in Iowa with her grandmother. These added stories really make her grandmother come alive to the reader.This is a fun, relatively short tale of a cross country adventure before there wer... More About: Girlfriends , Book Review , Book
Girlfriends Hit the Road: a 1920s Road Trip Book Review of Eight Women, Two
2008-07-27 16:36:00 Book Review of Eight Women , Two Model Ts, and the American West (2007) by Joanne WilkeAuthor Joanne Wilke is a wonderful storyteller whose childhood memories waffle into the readers’ nostrils like homemade apple pie. She beautifully captures the story of her grandmother’s trip to California from Iowa in 1924.Eight young women loaded their belongings into two Model T cars and headed to California. Wilke tries to answer the question why did these girls do this? How did they find the courage and convince their parents to let them go? Even though Wilke worked from living testimonies of some of the women who made the journey, read their journals and letters back home, this adventure had many gaps and conflicting accounts. Wilke supplements the story with her own childhood memories of spending the summers in Iowa with her grandmother. These added stories really make her grandmother come alive to the reader.This is a fun, relatively short tale of a cross country adventure before there ... More About: Girlfriends , Book Review , Book
Volver: Movie Review - A Woman's Interior World
2008-07-08 16:50:00 The world revolves around the lives of women in Spanish director Pedro Almod?var?s latest film, Volver (2006). It is a wonderful depiction of survival, loyalty, and integrity yet the action on the screen bears little resemblance to what is really going on in the lives, hearts, and heads of the women.Almod?var demonstrates once again (as he did in the film All About My Mother) that he truly understands the dual nature of women. He understands that women often have their external life, one that is busy and complex, but it is in their interior life (often very different than what is seen by others) where the core of her being dwells. His female characters are smart, fallible, sophisticated, genuine, and complex, perhaps some of the most complex female characters ever represented in film.Volver is a relational film though perhaps few women can relate to the circumstances Penélope Cruz finds herself in but it isn?t to the situation that we can relate but rather who her character, Raimund... More About: Movie , World , Movie Review , Review
Volver: Movie Review - A Woman's Interior World
2008-07-08 16:50:00 The world revolves around the lives of women in Spanish director Pedro Almodόvar’s latest film, Volver (2006). It is a wonderful depiction of survival, loyalty, and integrity yet the action on the screen bears little resemblance to what is really going on in the lives, hearts, and heads of the women.Almodόvar demonstrates once again (as he did in the film All About My Mother) that he truly understands the dual nature of women. He understands that women often have their external life, one that is busy and complex, but it is in their interior life (often very different than what is seen by others) where the core of her being dwells. His female characters are smart, fallible, sophisticated, genuine, and complex, perhaps some of the most complex female characters ever represented in film.Volver is a relational film though perhaps few women can relate to the circumstances Penélope Cruz finds herself in but it isn’t to the situation that we can relate but rather who her character, ... More About: Movie , World , Movie Review , Review , Interior
The Namesake Review: Time is Our Destiny
2008-06-12 16:12:00 The characters in the Indian film, The Namesake (2006), unfold in front of us as life unfolds. A young Bengali woman finds herself on a journey to New York City in 1979 when her family arranges for her marriage. Her husband, an Indian PhD student studying in New York, is unknown to her, a stranger, but he is kind and together they develop a warm, supportive marriage. Ashima, meaning no boundaries or without limits, seems to play a relatively passive role as she raises her children, their personalities overcoming her own like waves, but she never bows to their own strength. Instead, she bends with it like grass along a river or a reed in the wind.The film explores the theme common seen in Indian films released in America, the struggle between Indian tradition and American values, old and new, adjustment and preservation but there was more to this storyline by famous female author, Jhumpa Lahiri, than cultural adjustments. The movie was about the inevitable passage of time. Ashima was... More About: Destiny , Time , Review
Strong Women: Strong Fathers ? Lara Croft, Jessie Fremont, Condoleezza Rice
2008-03-31 14:02:00 Happy Birthday Jessie Ann Benton FremontJessie was born on May 31, 1824 in near Lexington, Virginia. She was the daughter of a famous and powerful U.S. Senator who not only doted on his daughter but included her in meetings with Washington officials and trained her to assist him in his work. Jessie's attention from her father falls under the Zeus-Athena category where the father is the one who helps his weaker-sex daughter gain power and prestige in society. It is because of the father's influence and power that the young woman is tolerated by society instead of ostracized, ignored or even in some cases burned at the stake as a witch.Many movies and storylines today still feature women who owe their strength to their father. This archetypal thread is seen in Angelina Jolie 's character, Lara Croft in the Tomb Raider movies. In these storylines, the mother is either dead or negligible because of a weakness in character. It is amazing how many times a strong female character is attr... More About: Women , Condoleezza Rice , Rice , Fathers
Privacy Policy
2008-03-28 15:41:00 COMMITMENT TO YOUR PRIVACYFaMiss site/blog is owned and operated by Sophia Management, LLC. Your privacy on the Internet is of the utmost importance to us. At Sophia Management, LLC, we want to make your experience online satisfying and safe.Because we gather certain types of information about our users, we feel you should fullyunderstand our policy and the terms and conditions surrounding the capture and use of thatinformation. This privacy statement discloses what information we gather and how we useit.INFORMATION Sophia Management, LLC GATHERS AND TRACKSSophia Management, LLC gathers two types of information about users:· Information that users provide through optional, voluntary submissions. These arevoluntary submissions to receive our electronic newsletters, to participate in ourmessage boards or forums, to email a friend, and from participation in polls andsurveys:· Information Sophia Management, LLC gathers through aggregated trackinginformation derived main... More About: Privacy , Policy , Privacy policy
Do You Have A Best Selling Book Inside You?
2008-03-27 20:22:00 "Be adventurous. Try a lot of different things.Who cares if it doesn't work out?It is only paper." - Mary Engelbreit, artist & business executiveHave you dreamt of becoming the next J.K. Rowling?Do you have a story you have been working on but you just keep letting it collect dust?Do you write, but don't think you have the time to write an entire book?If you said yes to any of these questions, then I encourage you to try an amazing program called"How to Write a Book in 14 Days" I bought and tried this program. It is great. My writer's block vanished and my writing is better now that I use Steve Manning's techniques. I am still in the middle of my 14 day program, but I already several chapters written for my first book.How to Write a Book in 14 Days has received endorsements from many writers including one of the authors of Chicken Soup for the Soul, Mark Victor Hansen.You will find t... More About: Selling , Inside
Foreign Film Review: All About My Mother
2008-03-16 18:05:00 Few things are more powerful or influential than a relationship between a mother and a child. A good relationship can be tremendously rewarding and a bad one can leave both of you limping through life. Why is the bond so powerful? Your mother is your first encounter with life, with nourishment, and with survival. All foods, emotions, drinks, and medications a pregnant woman has during pregnancy become the body and mind of the baby. In the womb, everything a mother does directly influences the child she is creating. No wonder a mother's child grows up to scrutinize and evaluate every single move she makes. The child is still thinking that what his or her mother does directly influences their life intensely.Literature and film abound with explorations of just who a mother is. A mother is always an enigma. The 1999 Spanish film "All About My Mother " starring Cecilia Roth and Penelope Cruz explores the intrigue of who a mother really is in a very creative way.The acting is excelle... More About: Film , Review , Film Review
Determination to do One's Best: Gertrude Bell, The Mother of Iraq
2008-03-02 18:07:00 Today one may hesitate to put "Mother of Iraq " on her resume, but that is exactly who English Explorer, Gertrude Bell was. You?ve probably heard of T.E. Lawrence but have you heard of Gertrude Bell?Gertrude was a few years older than T.E. Lawrence and they both played a critical role in the formation of Iraq. Her legacy, her story is usually completely overshadowed by Lawrence even though her professional contribution was at least as important. She is an example of female character overlooked when history is written.Gertrude believed in the formation of an Arab state called Iraq. The British government was intent on creating a western-type nation and government in the Middle East but few Western citizens who were in charge of this project understood the needs and psychology of this region better than Gertrude.Our current place in history offers hindsight to the challenges that were to come because Westerners imposed their form of government and organization in a region who thought d...
Nature's Cure for a Weary Soul
2008-02-25 15:55:00 An immersion into nature slowly ebbs the clanging thoughts of a mind, one by one. They fall away into much needed silence until you can at last be at peace, hearing the abundant sounds of life in nature.The length of time it takes to find this place of mind-quiet depends on how long it has been since you were last in nature. I myself find that a simple hike near my home is no longer sufficient. It takes me days to unwind and fully embrace the voices of wind in trees, water waves lapping against the rock, crows cawing, or seagulls bellowing. Once I finally cast away all the useless dribble in my mind, power, confidence, and serenity rush in.Nineteenth century writer, Elizabeth C. Wright talks about the dichotomy between civilization's conversations and nature's voice."?[We rush off into the woods, out of the way of finery and etiquette, and conventional rubbish, where we should escape from fashionable twaddle, gossips, and flirts ? from humbugs and house-hold botheration, and to be... More About: Soul , Cure
Life Stew - How Society Influences Female Identity
2008-02-21 18:17:00 Have you ever stopped to differentiate between the beliefs you want to have about your life?s direction versus the beliefs you inherit from old habits and from society? Are the expectations of your family, religion, and culture congruent with who you strive to be?What Exactly Do You Believe?The beliefs we have about ourselves, about what we should have accomplished, about how we should behave, about what a mother, family, or wife is determine whether we are satisfied with ourselves and ultimately whether we love and accept ourselves. Many women feel frustration and even self-hatred or at least disappointment surrounding their roles as wives, lovers, career women, and mothers. They hold themselves to standards that are based on rules. These rules are based on beliefs about what a woman is.Women do have a quest at this time in our culture. It is the quest to fully embrace their feminine nature, learning how to value themselves as women and heal the deep wound of the feminine.[i]What i... More About: Society , Life , Female , Identity
True to Yourself ? Following Oprah?s Lead
2008-01-17 06:05:00 I've hesitated to write about successful women who are alive today because I take liberties with the way I think about and present successful women. I read many biographies of women and there are a lot of choices they make that I do not like. I am not a true biographer, I do not share all the lessons that successful women can show us, often I emphasize their strengths and struggles as I recognize them to be issues women are struggling with today.With modern women I worry that I will horribly represent them because I find the reporting on celebrities and/or successful modern women dubious. Perhaps I am afraid of an angry phone call or email. Yet there are some women today who one cannot continue to overlook, especially if you are talking about success, in this case, the Queen of Success, Oprah .I just watched Oprah Unauthorized (2007). Surprisingly the DVD I rented from my library looked as pristine as some of the DVDs I request on obscure women. It was a wonderful video that raised ... More About: True , Lead
Englewood Author?s Novel Inspired by Colorado Castle Owner
2008-01-16 02:16:00 A Scottish castle brimming with European antiques is not what you would expect to see in Northern Douglas County. Nor would you expect to run into over 3,000 acres of pristine undeveloped land just east of Castle Pines Village. Even odder, this castle and the land was owned and governed by a Southern belle who raised cattle.Colorado 's beauty and sunny days attract all sorts of people with interesting pasts and Tweet Kimble brought her life steeped in European culture to our Rocky Mountain State.Englewood author Corinne Joy Brown was one of the last writers to interview Tweet before she died in 1999. Tweet's character was so strong and so fascinating to Corinne that Tweet served as the inspiration for her historic novel "MacGregor's Lantern." The castle Tweet owned was modeled after Scottish castles. During the research for Corinne's book, Corinne discovered that the Scots dominated in the ranching industry in Colorado and Wyoming. It may have been this influence that encouraged ... More About: Author , Owner , Inspired
Author Donates Royalties to Stop Dam Building
2008-01-03 13:09:00 India has undergone many dam projects as have many other developing countries. Foreign investment, flood control, irrigation canals, and energy production are the cited reasons for dam construction but critics claim that the devastation to the human population living in the flood zones and the ecological damage, as well as statistics stating historical dam projects provide significantly less energy output as expected, encourage extreme resistance to dam construction.In India, massive protests in the form of hunger strikes, and donations of book royalties from famous Indian writer Arundhati Roy* keep this debate in the news.Book Review: "Power Politics", 2001, author Arundhati Roy, Indian female writer (also author of famous novel "The God of Small Things"This book is a series of essays exploring water dam building and energy production in India, political response to September 11, 2001 in expectation of a U.S. war with Afghanistan, and free speech.One essay from the book is called "... More About: Building , Author , Stop , Royalties
Book & Movie Explore Challenges of Marriage
2007-12-30 18:30:00 Doris Lessing in her 1950 novel, "The Grass is Singing," many of Edith Wharton's stories, and the recent movie "The Painted Veil" explore the tragic consequences of the socially upheld expectation of women to marry. In today's culture, women still feel compelled to "make a good match" even if they consider themselves modern or progressive.Kitty Garstin, played by Naomi Watts in the 2006 film "The Painted Veil" was confronted by her family who implied that they no longer wished to financially support her and that it was time for her to get married, thus becoming someone else's burden. This film was set in the 1920's and Kitty did not have the skills and society did not have the infrastructure to allow a woman of her class to earn her own income and thereby support herself. Kitty's only path to "independence" was to get married, even if she didn't want to, or as in this case, was not in love with her suitor. Her marriage led her on a downward tailspin to the bleak, grim lands o... More About: Movie , Marriage , Book , Explore , Halle
Exploring the Dim Recesses of Our Imagination
2007-12-29 19:02:00 Have you struggled to express an idea because you felt that others would think you were crazy? Have you ever thought that if others could read your thoughts they would think you were a freak? The creators of the movie "Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus" imagine how famous American photographer, Diane Arbus felt about her art and her private world.Movie Review: Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus2006 film starring Nicole Kidman and Robert Downing Jr.According to this film, Diane Arbus considered herself a freak because of the inner workings of her mind. Diane (played by Nicole Kidman) personifies her inner struggles, her inner voice and inner vision which finally led to her artistic expression. Robert Downing Jr. is disguised under a full body of fur. Downing, representing Diane?s core self, is afflicted with a hair growth condition that makes him a side show freak and an outcast. Diane slowly develops a relationship with this outcast and learns how to transform him int... More About: Imagination , Exploring
Reinventing Yourself, Changing Your Destiny ? Moonlight on the Avenue of Fa
2007-12-22 19:20:00 When we claim a moment to be magical, we feel as if that moment transcends our normal experiences, our ingrained rules, and our cultural outcomes. Magic raises us out of skepticism slowly but if it is good enough, we become fervent believers.Magic realism is a literary term describing how a story is told. The stories are grounded in reality but some characters have "supernatural" or larger-than-life abilities. With magical realism, women can take flight with dewy, velvet wings, fleeing a life that only had one outcome by trying to escape her iron-clad destiny.Authors such as Gabriel Garcia Marquez (author of One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera - which was just released as a movie) and Isabel Allende (author of The House of Spirits) and Gina B. Nahai (author of Moonlight on the Avenue of Faith) are some authors who write magical realism. Gina Nahai's character, Roxanna the Angel, took flight from a generational destiny and from Tehran where a woman's abili... More About: Destiny , Changing
Indian Writer Arundhati Roy Reminds Us About an Artist's Role in Society
2007-12-11 18:45:00 Arundhati Roy's observation (taken from her book: Power Politics)"Painters, writers, singers, actors, dancers, filmakers, musicians are meant to fly, to push at the frontiers, to worry the edges of the human imagination, to conjure beauty from the most unexpected things, to find magic in places where others never thought to look."Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com More About: Society , Indian , Role , Writer , Remi
The Easy Way to Send Out Christmas Cards
2007-12-10 17:52:00 I want to share a fun, inexpensive service with you. Jacquie Lawson is an excellent artist and business owner who created a service that offers animated cards that are fun and musical. The service is incredibly affordable. It costs $10 per year and you can send an unlimited number of cards.She has a wide selection and offers great support. You receive an email when your card is sent and when it is opened. She has several Christmas and winter cards.I hope you love her wonderful, easy, creative service as much as I do. Click here to access her electronic greeting card website.Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com More About: Send , Cards , Easy , Easy Way
Finding Integrity as a Woman
2007-11-23 18:31:00 Achieving integrity, made up of public and private acts in sync with a woman?s true self, is life?s journey.How do we present to others who we truly are? How to we make decisions reinforcing what we believe in? And sometimes we ask: How do we discover who we truly are? Integrity is a representation of an authentic self. It is a consistent display of our beliefs, values, and moral codes. But the path to integrity is littered with diversions and obstacles, making it challenging to truly live in step with ourselves.First is the task of discovering who we truly want to be as a human being. We must strip away all the layers of other?s expectations, all our own weaknesses and fears, and then take a look at who is left. Do we like what we see? Is the woman who was buried beneath expectations and rules a woman we would like to spend time with?Authors help us in this discovery processes by leading us through worlds, characters, and situations we might not otherwise meet. How does our integri... More About: Woman , A Woman
"A Weekend to Change Your Life" Review
2007-11-14 16:30:00 A Weekend to Change Your Life : Find Your Authentic Self After a Lifetime of Being All Things to All People by Joan Anderson, a book reviewThere is no shortage of literature about the struggles of an empty-nester woman these days.This non-fiction book plays nicely into that catagory. Even though I am not her target market, I enjoyed the book. It was a sober reminder, leading me to recognize that choices I make each day compound and if I do not make choices to develop my own talents and presever my own interests; I may find that I completely abandoned myself and then struggle to reconnect with my own voice.Author Joan Anderson hosts workshops for women who struggle with knowing what they want in life because they spent most of their life giving to others. These women gave so much that they didn't have anything left for themselves.Her method encourages women to escape to a beautiful, inspirational place. There you can be alone with yourself so that you are not tempted to do anything f... More About: Review
"You Can Heal Your Life" Book Review
2007-11-06 14:07:00 Author Louise L. Hay did not grow up with a "charmed" life. She had a lot to overcome, and she did. She is the author of an international best seller, "You Can Heal Your Life " and the founder of the publishing company, Hay House. Her publishing company handles the writing lives of many people you know including Suze Orman, Deepak Chopra, and Wayne Dyer, just to name a few.I strongly recommend this book even though it was first written in 1984. Her health book is timeless. It doesn't overwhelm with health jargon and yet it will really cause you to stop and think about how you treat and think about your body. I decided to go through this book one chapter per day. The chapters are short and it is easy to read one a day, even if you have a tight schedule. She presents interesting a model linking specific health problems and our daily thoughts and behaviors."Remember, you have been criticizing yourself for years and it hasn?t worked. Try approving of yourself and see what happens."- quo... More About: Book Review , Review , Book
Christmas is for Bunnies?
2007-11-03 18:24:00 If you are looking for a cuddly little Christmas present for a son, daughter, or grandchild, then please consider "Flossy" bunny. These adorable bunnies are made by Denver women who are learning new skills to try and support themselves. They are part of the Denver metro "Empowerment Program" which was started in 1986.Where to get a Flossy Bunny: Tattered Cover Bookstores orThe Empowerment ProgramClick here to read article "Empowering Women, One Stitch at a Time"Flossy The Feel Better Bunny is an excellent Christmas Idea - here's to bunnies for Christmas.Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com
Can You Be a "Pioneer" and Not Be Free?
2007-10-25 17:58:00 For all their show of strength,their straight backs,and strong will,Charlotte Bronte & Edith Wharton still exhibit a profound entrenchment in social prisons.Charlotte in her rewrite of Emily?s work so that it appears tamer, less grim and more ChristianandEdith who lingered in a love-less marriage because divorce was unacceptable.Neither woman, though pioneers, were truly free.Are you allowing yourself to be held back by societal expectations or other prisons?Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com More About: Free , Pioneer
Have you always dreamt of writing a novel?
2007-10-24 17:09:00 If so, now is your chance. November is "National Novel Writing Month". There is a special online novel writing support program starting November 1st.Visit http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/whatisnano to register.The goal is to write as fast as you can for an entire month. Participants who finish the contest will find that they wrote at least 175 pages of their novel. The website has support features and you will know that you are part of a group trying to do the same time.If you've been putting off writing that novel, maybe now is your chance. You will have the energy and support of thousands of others who are doing what you are doing.Women's Success History Modernizing the wisdom and trials of the women who blazed the paths before us. Visit http://famiss.blogspot.com
Add 2 Parts Humor, 1 Part Cynicism ? Create a Life Full of Laughs
More articles from this author:2007-10-18 20:16:00 Today is playwright Wendy Wasserstein?s birthday. Her last play, ?Third? will be performing at the Denver Center Theater for Performing Arts for a couple more days. There are few writers today who are highly intelligent and still relevant. Wendy?s wit embraced a classic liberal arts education, combining it with a baby boomer perspective. Her lighthearted cynicism helped her win a Tony Award for ?The Heidi Chronicles?. Wendy was the first female to win a Tony as a solo writer.In 2006, Wendy died of cancer. She was only 55. She was a respected New York playwright since 1977. In her last play ?Third?, Wendy?s main character, Lisa, is a professor at an esteemed New England liberal arts college. She considers herself a culturally evolved person who embraces cultural and lifestyle diversity and yet she struggles when one of her students depicts a lifestyle she can?t stand. This young, optimistic, athletic male student represents the ?old white American male? world, a representat... More About: Humor , Life , Part , Full , Parts 1, 2, 3 |



